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MUSIC

Study: 87 Percent Of Musicians Are Using AI In Their Work

It found that 87% of artists have incorporated AI into at least one part of their process. AI is powering a new era of self-sufficient artists. Artists are beginning to write, produce and promote their work at a level previously only achievable with a team around them. - Hypebot

Emanuel Ax Is Musical America’s Artist Of The Year For 2026

Gabriela Lena Frank was named Composer of the Year; Jakub Hrůša, music director of London’s Royal Opera and music director-designate of the Czech Philharmonic, is Conductor of the Year; bass-baritone Gerald Finley is Vocalist of the Year; and San Diego Symphony CEO Martha Gilmer is Impresario of the Year. - Musical America

Yuval Sharon To Depart Detroit Opera By Mutual Agreement

While the company broadened both its repertoire and its audience during Sharon’s six years as artistic director (he departs at the end of this season), he and the board have agreed that, at this time, the company simply doesn’t have the money to realize his creative ambitions. - Detroit Free Press (MSN)

San Antonio Philharmonic Says It Will Perform This Season’s Remaining Concerts At Its Current Venue

“The San Antonio Philharmonic is planning regular concerts at the Scottish Rite (Cathedral and Auditorium), despite the cancelation of holiday events and reports the group has been given an eviction notice to vacate the premises.” - San Antonio Report

Building Boom: A New Generation Of Opera Houses

The world is now witnessing a renewed investment in large-scale cultural venues that aim to restore music’s physical and communal dimensions. These projects attempt to reframe the basic act of listening, not through screens, but in a space shared by hundreds or thousands of people. - YNet News

Christmas Music Has Become A License To Print Money

Spotify observes “the first big jump” in holiday-song streaming on Sept. 1, she noted. Activity ticks up again the next month; holiday playlist creation in the U.S. rose 60% from October 2024 to October 2025. Come November, for many listeners, it’s “all Christmas music all the time.” - The Wall Street Journal

What Would It Take To Make Concert Tickets Accessible Again?

It’s clear that what we need is two policy changes: "Capping or curbing resale,  so that you can only pass a ticket on at face value more anti-scalping legislation” - CBC

How Alban Berg’s ‘Wozzeck’ Keeps On Shocking Its Audience, A Century On

“The music is thoroughly and smoothly integrated with the plot, representing opera in its purest ideal of form.” - The New York Times

Enrico Morricone Finally Gets His Opera Premiere

But sadly, he’s not here to see it. “Why the opera was not performed when it was written, in 1995, offers a snapshot of the classical music scene in Italy at the time, which snubbed Morricone as a mere composer of film soundtracks.” - The New York Times

The Holiday Music Race In Britain Is So, So Serious

Sorry, it’s truly the Christmas music race. “There are 20 Christmas songs overall in the Top 40. But these classics will have new rivals for the Christmas No 1 next week, as a number of charity and novelty singles enter the race.” - The Guardian (UK)

An Ethnomusicologist Analyzes Eartha Kitt’s “Santa Baby”

Prof. Michael O’Brien discusses why we listen to so many of the same songs year after year, the unusual appeal of “Santa Baby,” and why Eartha Kitt’s version is so much better than Madonna’s (or anyone else’s). - The Post and Courier (Charleston)

Fred Child To Lead Portland Classical Music Station

He is best known for his 25-year run as host of American Public Media’s national classical music program “Performance Today.” Child, who will relocate to Oregon from New York City, stepped down from the show in October. - Inside Radio

Jake Heggie’s New Opera: A Historic 1976 Wine Competition

His one-act opera "The Judgement of Paris" is set to make its world premiere at Festival Napa Valley at Charles Krug Winery in St. Helena on July 18, part of the Wine Country event's 20th anniversary season. - Los Angeles Times (MSN)

Can Literary Fiction Help Save Classical Music?

Since 2020, well over a dozen novels have taken classical music as their setting. Of course, novels about classical music are nothing new. But what is notable about this recent surge in classical music fiction is that many of these texts center on a scathing critique of the industry itself. - Public Books

Mark Swed: LA’s Best Classical Music Of 2025

Classical music’s survival instincts proved reliable. New leaders of L.A.’s arts institutions are bringing vitality to the region, empowering musicians and giving fans hope and optimism. - Los Angeles Times

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